• HeartyBeast
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    -91 year ago

    I find this quite surprising. When I’m working from home during the winter, I’m heating a lot of the house that would normally be unheated.

    I would have assumed that bringing multiple people together into a single heated space would have been more energy efficient

      • HeartyBeast
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        61 year ago

        From the article > The main causes of remote workers’ reduced emissions were less office energy use, as well as fewer emissions from a daily commute.

        Again - I’m really surprised that net energy use is less for distributed workers (setting aside commmute energy use).

          • Also they cool down offices because “business clothes” mean pants and at least golf shirts but probably long sleeve shirts and maybe a tie for some reason. Meaning the men need to have it at 67 or so to not sweat balls and the women wind up wearing cardigans in August. Meanwhile i just try to keep it under 80 in my place, use a personal fan and maybe hang a little brain out of my short shorts while in a Zoom call.

      • HeartyBeast
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        11 year ago

        Yes, of course. But I’m calling out the one factor that they specifically talk about

        • JustEnoughDucks
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          21 year ago

          What’s more efficient? Heating a small home that id well insulated and geared towards economical energy use or heating massive empty spaces of a practically non-insulated office building with massive heaters while at the same times the homes are being heated? (Albeit to a lower temperature)

          • HeartyBeast
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            31 year ago

            There’s a whole lot of assumptions there. Anyway, the report says I’m wrong.